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High Ground (2020) is an Australian Western that is based on post-WWI historical events that occurred in Arnhem Land, which is part of the Northern Territory of Australia. It highlighted the history of the Aboriginal peoples of the region and was seen as a dramatized historical epic that deals with some of the darker aspects of Australia’s colonialist history.
In the words of the fim’s synopsis, High Ground is “Set against the stunning landscapes of 1930s Arnhem Land,” and follows the story of “young Aboriginal man Gutjuk (Jacob Junior Nayinggul) who in a bid to save the last of his family teams up with ex-soldier Travis (The Mentalist star Simon Baker) to track down Baywara – the most dangerous warrior in the Territory, who is also his uncle. As Travis and Gutjuk journey through the outback, they begin to earn each other’s trust, but when the truths of Travis’ past actions are suddenly revealed, it is he who becomes the hunted.”
High Ground‘s Real History, Explained

The cinematic events of High Ground (2020) aren’t historically accurate, per se: instead, the film is a revisionist Western much like Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained, in which a marginalized or oppressed group gets (fictional) justice through some kind of heroic journey and/or revenge quest. However, the real history the film references is the “Gan Gan massacre” of 1911, in which more than 30 men, women, and children of the Indigenous Australian riverside community of Gan Gan were killed by colonial police and settlers who were moving into the region.









